Abstract

We demonstrate the utility of a temperature gradient ∇T in transporting dopants, such as As, unidirectionally through SiO2 and into Si. The transport, based on thermomigration of dopant‐rich precipitates toward the heat source, turns oxide into an efficient diffusion source. It also provides the only possible method of forming buried n+conductive layers in recrystallized, thick Si‐on‐SiO2 structures. To build such structures, arsenic is implanted into the oxide, where it remains trapped during deposition of polycrystalline Si and its recrystallization from the melt, but is subsequently released into the Si film by a directional drift in the ∇T. In the future, controllingdopant transport with two independent parameters (temperature and ∇T), instead of the temperature alone, may allow processing of three‐dimensional circuits at higher temperatures than would be otherwise possible.